Men and Women
in the Holocaust
In many cases,
the hardships that the Jews encountered under Nazi rule altered the traditional
division of roles between men and women. Often Jewish men, especially in Poland,
were targeted first - detained in concentration camps, assigned to forced labor,
or even murdered. Accordingly, the men tended to emigrate or flee from areas
under Nazi rule before the rest of the family, if the opportunity arose.
Subsequently, women and children often remained their families' primary source
of support. Jewish women found it easier, in some cases, to leave Jewish
communities for it was harder for them to be identified as Jews. Jewish men were
circumcised, thereby making them a target for Jewish identification. Within the
reality of the concentration camps, the Nazis segregated prisoners according to
gender and treated them separately. In all cases in the extermination camps,
though they might have been healthy and strong, women were sent to their death
if they had small children with them.
Total Sources (by media type):